February 5, 2012
Things Are Not O.K.
By PAUL KRUGMAN
In a better world — specifically, a world with a better policy elite — a good jobs report would be cause for unalloyed celebration. In the world we actually inhabit, however, every silver lining comes with a cloud. Friday’s report was, in fact, much better than expected, and has made many people, myself included, more optimistic. But there’s a real danger that this optimism will be self-defeating, because it will encourage and empower the purge-and-liquidate crowd.
So, about that jobs report: it was genuinely good, certainly compared with the dreariness that has become the norm. Notably, for once falling unemployment was the real thing, reflecting growing availability of jobs rather than workers dropping out of the labor force, and hence out of the unemployment measure.
Furthermore, it’s not hard to see how this recovery could become self-sustaining. In particular, at this point America is seriously under-housed by historical standards, because we’ve built very few houses in the six years since the housing bubble popped.
The main thing standing in the way of a housing bounce-back is a sharp fall in household formation — econospeak for lots of young adults living with their parents because they can’t afford to move out. Let enough Americans find jobs and get homes of their own, and housing, which got us into this slump, could start to power us out.
That said, our economy remains deeply depressed. As the Economic Policy Institute points out, we started 2012 with fewer workers employed than in January 2001 — zero growth after 11 years, even as the population, and therefore the number of jobs we needed, grew steadily. The institute estimates that even at January’s pace of job creation it would take us until 2019 to return to full employment.
And we should never forget that the persistence of high unemployment inflicts enormous, continuing damage on our economy and our society, even if the unemployment rate is gradually declining. Bear in mind, in particular, the fact that long-term unemployment — the percentage of workers who have been out of work for six months or more — remains at levels not seen since the Great Depression. And each month that this goes on means more Americans permanently alienated from the work force, more families exhausting their savings, and, not least, more of our fellow citizens losing hope.
So this encouraging employment report shouldn’t lead to any slackening in efforts to promote recovery. Full employment is still a distant dream — and that’s unacceptable. Policy makers should be doing everything they can to get us back to full employment as soon as possible.
Unfortunately, that’s not the way many people with influence on policy see it.
Very early in this slump — basically, as soon as the threat of complete financial collapse began to recede — a significant number of people within the policy community began demanding an early end to efforts to support the economy. Some of their demands focused on the fiscal side, with calls for immediate austerity despite low borrowing costs and high unemployment. But there have also been repeated demands that the Fed and its counterparts abroad tighten money and raise interest rates.
What’s the reasoning behind those demands? Well, it keeps changing. Sometimes it’s about the alleged risk of inflation: every uptick in consumer prices has been met with calls for tighter money now now now. And the inflation hawks at the Fed and elsewhere seem undeterred either by the way the predicted explosion of inflation keeps not happening, or by the disastrous results last April when the European Central Bank actually did raise rates, helping to set off the current European crisis.
But there’s also a sort of freestanding opposition to low interest rates, a sense that there’s something wrong with cheap money and easy credit even in a desperately weak economy. I think of this as the urge to purge, after Andrew Mellon, Herbert Hoover’s Treasury secretary, who urged him to let liquidation run its course, to “purge the rottenness” that he believed afflicted America.
And every time we get a bit of good news, the purge-and-liquidate types pop up, saying that it’s time to stop focusing on job creation.
Sure enough, no sooner were the new numbers out than James Bullard, the president of the St. Louis Fed, declared that the new numbers make further Fed action to promote growth unnecessary. And the sad truth is that the good jobs numbers have definitely made it less likely that the Fed will take the expansionary action it should.
So here’s what needs to be said about the latest numbers: yes, we’re doing a bit better, but no, things are not O.K. — not remotely O.K. This is still a terrible economy, and policy makers should be doing much more than they are to make it better.
lunes, febrero 06, 2012
THINGS ARE NOT O.K. / THE NEW YORK TIMES OP EDITORIAL ( VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED READING )
|
Etiquetas:
U.S. Economic And Political,
Unemployment
Suscribirse a:
Enviar comentarios (Atom)
Bienvenida
Estimados amigos,
Les doy cordialmente la bienvenida a este Blog informativo con artículos, análisis y comentarios de publicaciones especializadas y especialmente seleccionadas, principalmente sobre temas económicos, financieros y políticos de actualidad, que esperamos y deseamos, sean de su máximo interés, utilidad y conveniencia.
Pensamos que solo comprendiendo cabalmente el presente, es que podemos proyectarnos acertadamente hacia el futuro.
Gonzalo Raffo de Lavalle
Las convicciones son mas peligrosos enemigos de la verdad que las mentiras.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Quien conoce su ignorancia revela la mas profunda sabiduría. Quien ignora su ignorancia vive en la mas profunda ilusión.
Lao Tse
No soy alguien que sabe, sino alguien que busca.
FOZ
Only Gold is money. Everything else is debt.
J.P. Morgan
Les doy cordialmente la bienvenida a este Blog informativo con artículos, análisis y comentarios de publicaciones especializadas y especialmente seleccionadas, principalmente sobre temas económicos, financieros y políticos de actualidad, que esperamos y deseamos, sean de su máximo interés, utilidad y conveniencia.
Pensamos que solo comprendiendo cabalmente el presente, es que podemos proyectarnos acertadamente hacia el futuro.
Gonzalo Raffo de Lavalle
Las convicciones son mas peligrosos enemigos de la verdad que las mentiras.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Quien conoce su ignorancia revela la mas profunda sabiduría. Quien ignora su ignorancia vive en la mas profunda ilusión.
Lao Tse
No soy alguien que sabe, sino alguien que busca.
FOZ
Only Gold is money. Everything else is debt.
J.P. Morgan
Archivo del blog
-
▼
2012
(705)
-
►
mayo
(90)
-
►
may 25
(7)
- BOND EXODUS ON A PAR WITH EUROZONE BANK RUN / THE ...
- HOW STRONG IS CHINA´S ECONOMY? / THE ECONOMIST ( A...
- NEW SIGNS OF GLOBAL SLOWDOWN / THE WALL STREET JOU...
- MY SPEECH TO THE FINANCE GRADUATES / PROJECT SYNDI...
- MEXICO´S ZETAS REWRITE DRUG WAR IN BLOOD / REUTERS...
- RIYADH´S WALL OF OIL IS HITTING THE MARKETS / THE ...
- ARE THE MARKET´S BEST DAYS THIS YEAR BEHIND ? / BR...
-
►
may 24
(6)
- THE FUTURE WE WANT / THE NEW YORK TIMES OP EDITORI...
- WHY DO ECONOMIES STOP GROWING / PROJECT SYNDICATE ...
- SENSIBLE KEYNESIANS SEE NO EASY WAY OUT / THE FINA...
- FREE MONEY / DER SPIEGEL ( A MUST READ )
- IS CHINA RUNNING OUT OF OPTIONS ? / THE FINANCIAL ...
- JAPAN´S WTF CHART / ZERO HEDGE ( A MUST READ )
-
►
may 23
(6)
- A FRAGILE EUROPE MUST CHANGE FAST / THE FINANCIAL ...
- A GLOBAL NEW DEAL / PROJECT SYNDICATE ( A MUST REA...
- DEVALUATION -- LAST OPTION TO SAVE THE EURO / THE ...
- WHY CHINA WON´T RULE / PROJECT SYNDICATE ( A MUST ...
- AMERICA´S FINANCIAL DOOMSDAY( UPDATED AND UPGRADED...
- THE TWO FACES OF EGYPT´S MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD / DER ...
-
►
may 21
(6)
- DESPERATE TIMES CALL FOR DESPERATE ECB MEASURES / ...
- U.S. ECONOMY : WHY THE LOOMING FISCAL CLIFF MATTER...
- THE ONLY WAY TO STOP A EUROZONE BANK RUN / THE FIN...
- THE ANATOMY OF THE EUROZONE BANK RUN / THE FINANCI...
- BANKING : BACK TO THE WALL / THE FINANCIAL TIMES (...
- OUT OF ALIGNMENT : A FEW DISCONNECTS IN CEO PAY / ...
-
►
may 18
(6)
- THE LAST CHANCE TO RESCUE THE EURO / THE FINANCIAL...
- CRISIS OF CONFIDENCE / DER SPIEGEL ( A MUST READ )...
- THE ENDANGERED PUBLIC COMPANY / THE ECONOMIST ( A ...
- JUNIOR RESOURCE INVESTMENT IN A FINANCIAL MELTDOWN...
- THE BIG ENGINE THAT COULDN´T / THE ECONOMIST ( A M...
- THE DOLLAR, S&P 500, OIL, GOLD, SILVER, GOLD STOCK...
-
►
may 25
(7)
-
▼
febrero
(149)
-
▼
feb 06
(6)
- ASSESSING THE RISK OF A FINANCIAL CRISIS / THE FIN...
- THE FED VOTES NO CONFIDENCE / THE WALL STREET JOUR...
- U.S. DOLLAR, CRUDE OIL, GOLD, SILVER, S&P 500 / TH...
- THINGS ARE NOT O.K. / THE NEW YORK TIMES OP EDITOR...
- EUROPE´S BANKS FACE CHALLENGE ON CAPITAL / THE FIN...
- GERMANY : A BRIC,OR JUST STUCK IN A HARD PLACE ? /...
-
▼
feb 06
(6)
-
►
mayo
(90)
-
►
2011
(2028)
- ► septiembre (189)
-
►
2010
(2429)
- ► septiembre (200)
Entradas populares
-
THE FALCON LAKE MURDER AND MEXICO´S DRUG WARS / STRATFOR INTELLIGENCE ( HIGHLY RECOMMENDED READING )The Falcon Lake Murder and Mexico's Drug Wars October 21, 2010 0855 GMT By Scott Stewart STRATFOR published an analysis last Wednes...
-
The eurozone must shrink to survive Mohamed El-Erian May 14, 2012 Permalink Extreme political dysfunction is now...
-
Markets Insight . . Last updated: May 14, 2012 6:34 pm . . A whale in the waters of negative yields . . By Bill Gross ...
-
. REVIEW & OUTLOOK May 23, 2012, 7:11 p.m. ET A Mess the 45th President Will Inherit Taxpayers now stand behind deriv...
-
.. Mutually assured destruction in the eurozone Jean Pisani-Ferry May 22, 2012 Permalink The relationship between Gre...
-
Taxpayers must backstop Spain’s budget . Martin Feldstein . April 30, 2012 Permalink Spain is rapidly approaching...
-
. THE ROVING EYE A history of the world, BRIC by BRIC . Apr 28, 2012 . By Pepe Escobar . Goldman Sachs - via economist Jim O'N...
-
The Great American Disaster: How Much Gold Remains In Fort Knox? by Chris Weber A Huge Mystery Remains To Be Solved Yesterday marked t...
-
Gold & Gold Miners Are Closing in on a Major Bottom May 14th, 2012 at 8:38 am . “You can’t understand what lays ahead if...
-
May 20, 2012 6:30 pm The only way to stop a eurozone bank run By Wolfgang Münchau If you want to know what will dr...
Entradas populares
-
THE FALCON LAKE MURDER AND MEXICO´S DRUG WARS / STRATFOR INTELLIGENCE ( HIGHLY RECOMMENDED READING )The Falcon Lake Murder and Mexico's Drug Wars October 21, 2010 0855 GMT By Scott Stewart STRATFOR published an analysis last Wednes...
-
April 8, 2012 7:32 pm US union pensions hole deepens to $369bn By Dan McCrum and Ajay Makan in New York . The...
-
RGE's Wednesday Note: Greek Contagion Spreads—Time for Plan B Greetings from RGE! Even as the IMF and the eurozone have virtually finaliz...
-
Nestlé The unrepentant chocolatier Oct 29th 2009 LAUSANNE AND VEVEY From The Economist print edition The world’s biggest food company is...
-
Executive Doomsday Order: Obama Authorizes Gov to Seize Farms, Food, Processing Plants, Energy Resources, Transportation, Skilled Laborers ...
-
Feature . SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 2012 . The Worst of Times to Buy Stocks? . By RANDALL W. FORSYTH A leading fund manager se...
-
. The Neuroeconomics Revolution Robert J. Shiller 2011-11-21 . NEW HAVEN – Economics is at the start of a revolution tha...
-
The eurozone must shrink to survive Mohamed El-Erian May 14, 2012 Permalink Extreme political dysfunction is now...
-
France and the euro crisis The ratings game The perils for Nicolas Sarkozy in trying to preserve a credit rating Dec 3rd 2011 PARIS ....
-
Peru's reviving left Oh! Susana A mayoral contest may rewrite the country’s political script Sep 23rd 2010 | Lima ...
Temas
- 9/11 (1)
- A.I.G (1)
- Accounting (4)
- Adam Smith (1)
- Adela (1)
- Afghanistan (19)
- Africa (6)
- Age and Happines (1)
- Agriculture and Food (27)
- Ahmadineyad (1)
- Air Travel (2)
- Al Fatah (1)
- Alemania (1)
- Alternative Trading Systems (1)
- American Chamber of Commerce (2)
- Angela Merkel (3)
- Aniversario (2)
- Argentina (16)
- Arms Trade (1)
- Arte (1)
- Arts (1)
- Asia Economic and Political (63)
- Asset Management (4)
- Astronomy (2)
- Australia (11)
- Baltic Dry Index (1)
- Bank of America (2)
- Banks And Banking (594)
- Barack Obama (5)
- Base Metals (15)
- Belgium (1)
- Ben Bernanke (1)
- BIS (3)
- BNDES (2)
- Bolivia (6)
- Bond Markets (210)
- Boomers (1)
- Brazil (79)
- BRICs (14)
- Business and Management (9)
- California (3)
- Canada (6)
- Capitalism (2)
- Carry Trade (2)
- Cars (33)
- Central Banking (17)
- CEO´S (1)
- Cheese (1)
- Chile (15)
- China (488)
- Christine Lagarde (1)
- Civilizations (2)
- Coal (2)
- Colombia (8)
- Commodities (271)
- Consumerism (1)
- Copper (22)
- Corporate Finance (4)
- Cosmology (1)
- Credit Default Swaps (3)
- Cuba (6)
- Currencies (316)
- Cyberspace (1)
- Dalai Lama (1)
- Dark Pools (1)
- Davos (3)
- Decision Making (1)
- Democracy (1)
- Derivatives (42)
- Deutsche Bank (1)
- Donald Trump (1)
- Dubai (4)
- Earthquakes (1)
- EC (1)
- ECB (16)
- Economic Development (3)
- Economics (501)
- Ecuador. (5)
- Education (3)
- Egypt (22)
- Eike Batista (1)
- Emerging Markets (280)
- Entertainment (1)
- Equity Markets (2)
- Ernst Keller (1)
- Espirituality (6)
- ETF´s (3)
- Europe Economic and Political (992)
- Facebook (1)
- Financial Markets (331)
- Food Industry (2)
- Forecasting (1)
- Foreign Direct Investment (5)
- Former USSR (1)
- Formula One (1)
- France (39)
- Future and Options Markets (3)
- G20 (9)
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez (1)
- Gaston Acurio (1)
- GDP (1)
- General Motors (2)
- George Papandreou (1)
- George Soros (1)
- Germany (77)
- Gilts (1)
- GLD (1)
- Glencore (1)
- Global Deleveraging (1)
- Global Manufacturing (11)
- GM (1)
- Gold (771)
- Gold Standard (6)
- Gold Stocks (35)
- Goldman Sachs (15)
- Golf (2)
- Gonzalo Raffo Uzategui (1)
- Government Debt Markets (128)
- Government Project Financing (1)
- Great Britain (12)
- Greece (139)
- Hamas (1)
- Health Care Reform (1)
- Health Matters (61)
- Hedge Funds (12)
- Hezbollah (1)
- High Frequency Trading (2)
- Holland (2)
- Hungary (1)
- I.M.F. (4)
- Iceland (1)
- IMF (15)
- India (27)
- Indonesia (1)
- industry (1)
- Internet (2)
- Investment Strategies (134)
- Investment Trusts (1)
- iPad (1)
- Iran (43)
- Iraq (3)
- Ireland (10)
- Iron Ore (1)
- Islam (2)
- IslamIc Finance (1)
- Israel (32)
- Italy (27)
- J.F.K (1)
- J.P. Morgan Chase and Co. (1)
- Japan (54)
- Jihad (1)
- John Lennon (2)
- Josef Ackermann (1)
- JP Morgan Chase and Co. (7)
- Korea (2)
- Latin America Economic And Political (97)
- Leadership (5)
- Lebanon (1)
- Libor (2)
- Libya (14)
- Lionel Messi (1)
- Liquidity Trap (1)
- Literature (4)
- LME (1)
- LTRO (1)
- LUIS INACIO LULA DA SILVA (4)
- M3 (1)
- Management and Productivity (8)
- Mario Draghi (2)
- Mario Vargas Llosa (2)
- Market Economy (4)
- Marketing and Advertising (7)
- Mauritius (1)
- Media (1)
- Mexico (25)
- Michael Porter (1)
- Microsoft (1)
- Middle East (131)
- Milton Friedman (1)
- Mining (4)
- Money Market Funds (2)
- Money.Market Funds (1)
- Moral Hazard (1)
- Movies (1)
- Music (1)
- Mutual Funds (1)
- Nadine Heredia (1)
- Nanotechnology (1)
- NATO (4)
- Nestlé (1)
- North Africa (18)
- North Korea (9)
- Norway (2)
- Nouriel Roubini (1)
- Nuclear Security (3)
- Oil and Energy (319)
- Other Matters (2)
- Pakistan (9)
- Palestina (4)
- Paradigms (2)
- Pension Funds (16)
- Peru (51)
- Petrobras (1)
- Phillipines (1)
- Philosophy (43)
- Physics (1)
- Pimco (1)
- Politics (12)
- Polonia (1)
- Portugal (6)
- Precious Metals (41)
- Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal (1)
- Private Equity (4)
- Psychology (36)
- Public Sector (1)
- Publishing and Advertising (12)
- QE (21)
- Quantum Models (1)
- Quatar (1)
- Rabindranath Tagore (1)
- Rare Metals (2)
- Rating Agencies (2)
- Real Estate (142)
- Religion (17)
- Research and Development (1)
- Retirement Strategies (2)
- Richard Holbrooke (1)
- Russia (28)
- Saudi Arabia (7)
- Science and Environment (1)
- Science And Technology (51)
- SDR´s (1)
- Sex (1)
- Shipping (2)
- Silver (140)
- Smartphones (1)
- Soccer (17)
- SocGen (3)
- Societe Generale (1)
- Sociology (8)
- South America (1)
- Sovereigns (1)
- Spain (56)
- Sports (1)
- Stars (1)
- Steel (3)
- Steve Jobs (1)
- Stock Exchange (6)
- Stock Markets (338)
- Sugar (1)
- Supply Chains (1)
- Sweden (1)
- Swiss Franc (6)
- Switzerland (19)
- Syria (3)
- Tauromaquia (1)
- Tax Havens (7)
- Telecommunications (2)
- Television (2)
- Thailand (1)
- The Amazon (3)
- The Australian Dollar (2)
- The Bahamas (1)
- The Big Mac Index (1)
- The Brain (1)
- The Dollar (383)
- The Enviroment (60)
- The Euro (84)
- The Fed (30)
- The Freemasons (1)
- The Gregorian Calendar (1)
- The Internet (12)
- The Madoff Affair (1)
- The Nordic States (1)
- The Standard and Poor (1)
- The Sun (1)
- The Universe (5)
- The VIX Index (4)
- The World Bank (11)
- The Yen (7)
- The Yuan o Renminbi (36)
- Tibet (1)
- Trade (84)
- Trade Finance (2)
- Travel (1)
- Turkey (18)
- U.S. Debt Clock (2)
- U.S. Dollar Index (1)
- U.S. Economic And Political (2116)
- U.S. Markets (219)
- U.S. Monetary Base (3)
- UEFA (1)
- Unemployment (9)
- Unfunded Government Liabilities (5)
- United Kingdom (58)
- Urbanization (1)
- Vacaciones (3)
- Venezuela (8)
- Video Games (1)
- Vietnam (1)
- Vladimir Putin (2)
- Volatility (2)
- War on Drugs (34)
- Warren Buffett (2)
- Wars (6)
- Water (2)
- World Economic And Political (999)
- World Markets (242)
0 comentarios:
Publicar un comentario en la entrada